| Literature DB >> 25045196 |
Baptiste Barbot1, Sascha Hein2, Suniya S Luthar3, Elena L Grigorenko4.
Abstract
Estimation of age-group differences and intra-individual change across distinct developmental periods is often challenged by the use of age-appropriate (but non-parallel) measures. We present a short version of the Behavior Assessment System (Reynolds & Kamphaus, 1998), Parent Rating Scales for Children (PRS-C) and Adolescents (PRS-A), which uses only their common-items to derive estimates of the initial constructs optimized for developmental studies. Measurement invariance of a three-factor model (Externalizing, Internalizing, Adaptive Skills) was tested across age-groups (161 mothers using PRS-C; 200 mothers using PRS-A) and over time (115 mothers using PRS-C at baseline and PRS-A five years later) with the original versus short PRS. Results indicated that the short PRS holds a sufficient level of invariance for a robust estimation of age-group differences and intra-individual change, as compared to the original PRS, which held only weak invariance leading to flawed developmental inferences. Importance of test-content parallelism for developmental studies is discussed.Entities:
Keywords: BASC; developmental change; measurement invariance; parent rating scale; scale parallelism
Year: 2014 PMID: 25045196 PMCID: PMC4096675 DOI: 10.1016/j.appdev.2014.04.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Dev Psychol ISSN: 0193-3973